We started Control Your Cash for one reason:
Your relationship with money is almost certainly dysfunctional. You don’t know what you don’t know, probably because nobody ever taught you.
Fortunately, you can stop letting money act on you – and actually take charge of it.
We don't give patently obvious advice here, stuff like "spend less than you make." (Wow, what insight.)
Instead, we show you what pitfalls to avoid and what quiet opportunities to take advantage of. Spend a little time here and you’ll no longer have to pretend that you know what the S&P 500 is. Or whether a Roth IRA is better than a traditional one. You’ll understand the why, and the how.
And you’ll find that personal finance is a lot less complicated than you thought.
The Latest
The Best Alternatives to a 401(k)
The well of creativity is barely a trickle at this point. Our muse went to St. Tropez with someone younger and better-looking, and that was months ago. Is she ever coming back? We’ll leave a light on. Spend more time at the gym. Buy more flattering clothes. Vacuum the house once in a while. Damn, […]
Carnival of Wealth, Back from the Dead Edition
If you missed last week’s Carnival of Wealth…well, you weren’t the only one. First, the excuse: we use a couple of hosting services to organize the carnival submissions for us. One of those services has been down for a while now, the other one takes submissions and watches them disappear into the ether. So […]
An Investopedia Repost About Lockouts and Such
From our Investopedia files, a piece about sports labor strife. Which doesn’t pertain to your life unless you’re an athlete, an agent, or maybe a team owner, but it’s an entertaining read. Trust us, we wrote it. Here’s an enticing sample: By 2011, pro football had metamorphosed from popular sport into national obsession. That spring, […]
Carnival of Wealth, Andrew Pohl Edition
That’s the problem with being selective. You accept only the good submissions, or the stupendously awful ones, and pretty soon the number of submitters dwindles to a trickle. Presenting another edition of the Carnival of Wealth, the only personal finance blog carnival worth a damn. Even with only 2 submitters. One of whom is […]
From the Archives
The Best Hotel Values in America, Volume II
Welcome to Part 2 ofour look at America’s biggest business-traveler hotel chains. We looked at room prices and amenities for 5 different chains, and chains of chains. See our previous post for which features we deem important, and which we can live without. The chains we looked at were Hampton Inn (a division of Hilton), […]
It’s Time To Get Unbalanced
NOTE: A big, sloppy welcome to all The Simple Dollar readers who discovered us this week. Unlike that site, where the comments are the only parts worth reading, here it’s the exact opposite. (Primarily because we don’t run comments. If you want to say something compelling or critical, try us here. Check out the […]
Renting is for mental patients.
3 bedrooms, 1 bath 19429 Albany Street, Detroit (like it was going to be in another city) $20. That is not a typo. But it’s been on the market for 3 months, so you should come in around $16. This country still doesn’t get it. Home prices have decreased to the point where it’s no […]
Car shopping: despite Washington, the advantage remains yours.
The one fatal conceit of our hyperintelligent, charismatic, Kryptonian chief executive is his conviction that no matter what problem needs to be solved, there’s an app for that. And by “app” we mean “government bureaucracy.” Americans used to be the one cohort on the planet who could be trusted to distrust their government. Today, we […]